MOST-MENTIONED SPORTS FIGURES
Rather than break down the amount of time a specific athlete or figure was covered, we counted how frequently names were mentioned in the transcripts from the week. The 15 most-mentioned sports people for Oct. 5-11.

Notes

Stuart Scott dumbed down the Jets discourse: The Jets were on Monday Night Football last week, meaning I'm really sorry if you happened to catch SportsCenter afterwards, which exists to be a glorified postgame show. Since the Jets played a respectable-if-unspectacular game by their standards against the then-undefeated Texans, you might have expected a fairly even split of team-specific discussion. Well, the Jets led the Texans in airtime by a 2-to-1 ratio, and nearly all of that Jets coverage was negative. Somehow, hanging tough with the best team in the NFL doesn't constitute a tough loss for the Jets, but rather a sign the team needs to bring in Tim Tebow, and that Mark Sanchez is the root of the team's problems. Just ignore those holes and injuries at all the other positions.

The night culminated with Stuart Scott setting up what had to be the show's worst discussion topic of the year. Here's how he tried to get Steve Young and Trent Dilfer to sum up Mark Sanchez's season:

Stuart Scott: "If you were to do a Broadway show on Mark Sanchez as a Jet QB this year, what kind of play would it be?"
Steve Young: "What?"
Scott: "I'm going there man, he's a Broadway guy."
Young: "Bring Arian Foster back. He can answer that one."

Poor Steve could barely contain his contempt. He's too good for that crew.

Most of the "Knicks season preview" was about a guy who's not on the Knicks: Jeremy Lin has gone to Houston—you might remember, it happened a few months ago and was discussed and debated and dissected endlessly. But ESPN spent lots of time making those Lin highlight montages, so they're going to be put to good use. There was a 3.25 minute segment previewing the Knicks season, and half of it was spent showing Lin highlights. The other half consisted of interviews with several Knicks players, largely about life without Jeremy Lin. You can sense the disappointment oozing through your coaxial cables that Linsanity—at least in a large Northeastern city—is a thing of the past. There's still hope! If the Knicks struggle the first few weeks of the season, be prepared for a season's worth of second-guessing the decision to let him go.